Sensory Readings of Scriptures by Neo-Confucian Scholars

Korean Religious Texts in Iconic and Performative Rituals - Yohan Yoo

Yohan Yoo [+-]
Seoul National University
Yohan Yoo is a Professor of Comparative Religion at Seoul National University. His previous publications include three books in Korean: Myths of Our Era (2012), Understanding Religious Studies (2020), and Understanding Religious Symbolism (2021). He has also co-authored Cosmologies of Pure Realms and the Rhetoric of Pollution (Routledge, 2021) and co-edited Books as Bodies and as Sacred Beings (Equinox, 2021) with James W. Watts.

Description

Chapter 4 focuses on sensory readings by Neo-Confucian scholars. Chu Hsi (1130-1200) of China and Yi Hwang (1501-1570) of Korea, leading scholars of the Neo-Confucian schools of each respective country, emphasized readings of Confucian scriptures. They believed that Confucian scriptures have transformative power when read repeatedly and deliberately. Chu introduced the concept – further developed by Yi – of encouraging a scholar to activate at least three senses when reading a text, and promoted it above the experience of merely reading the characters of the text. They advised Neo-Confucian scholars to try to make contact with the sages and fully internalize their teaching through the senses of sight, hearing, and taste when reading scriptures, though they did not directly appeal to the physical senses. First, the text should be recited aloud so that the reciters will hear their own voices, and sometimes those of their colleagues when several scholars read together. They imagined, furthermore, that the voices they were hearing while reading were those of the ancient sages themselves. Secondly, while hearing the voices of the sages, the reciting scholars should visualize their images, seeking personal communion with them. Finally, the meditative reading of scholars was frequently likened to savoring a text’s flavor. The act of reading a book was described as eating, biting, chewing, and tasting. When the readers recited the text aloud, pronouncing each syllable using tongues, lips and mouths, they were engaged in a gustatory experience: “chewing” and “tasting” scriptures.

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Citation

Yoo, Yohan. Sensory Readings of Scriptures by Neo-Confucian Scholars. Korean Religious Texts in Iconic and Performative Rituals. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 59-68 Nov 2024. ISBN 9781800504974. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=45236. Date accessed: 21 Nov 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.45236. Nov 2024

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